Back to Search Start Over

Electronically driven spin-reorientation transition of the correlated polar metal Ca

Authors :
Igor, Marković
Matthew D, Watson
Oliver J, Clark
Federico, Mazzola
Edgar, Abarca Morales
Chris A, Hooley
Helge, Rosner
Craig M, Polley
Thiagarajan, Balasubramanian
Saumya, Mukherjee
Naoki, Kikugawa
Dmitry A, Sokolov
Andrew P, Mackenzie
Phil D C, King
Source :
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

The interplay between spin–orbit coupling and structural inversion symmetry breaking in solids has generated much interest due to the nontrivial spin and magnetic textures which can result. Such studies are typically focused on systems where large atomic number elements lead to strong spin–orbit coupling, in turn rendering electronic correlations weak. In contrast, here we investigate the temperature-dependent electronic structure of [Formula: see text] , a [Formula: see text] oxide metal for which both correlations and spin–orbit coupling are pronounced and in which octahedral tilts and rotations combine to mediate both global and local inversion symmetry-breaking polar distortions. Our angle-resolved photoemission measurements reveal the destruction of a large hole-like Fermi surface upon cooling through a coupled structural and spin-reorientation transition at 48 K, accompanied by a sudden onset of quasiparticle coherence. We demonstrate how these result from band hybridization mediated by a hidden Rashba-type spin–orbit coupling. This is enabled by the bulk structural distortions and unlocked when the spin reorients perpendicular to the local symmetry-breaking potential at the Ru sites. We argue that the electronic energy gain associated with the band hybridization is actually the key driver for the phase transition, reflecting a delicate interplay between spin–orbit coupling and strong electronic correlations and revealing a route to control magnetic ordering in solids.

Details

ISSN :
10916490
Volume :
117
Issue :
27
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Accession number :
edsair.pmid..........8a86caaa8813132742a37887a93d33a9